199 P. 1041 | Cal. | 1921
The city of San Diego entered into a contract with James Kennedy for the construction of a dam for a reservoir to be used in connection with its municipal water-works. On May 1, 1918, there was due and unpaid from the city to the contractor the sum of $6,238.16. On May 6, 1918, a writ of attachment issued out of the superior court in and for the city and county of San Francisco in an action brought by Prosper Wolf against James Kennedy, together with a notice of garnishment, were served upon the mayor, auditor, treasurer, and manager of operations of San Diego for the purpose of garnishing all moneys, debts, credits, and effects due or owing to Kennedy. Thereafter, on May 6, *536 1918, Kennedy filed his claim with the auditing committee of the city, and the same had been allowed and paid. On December 20, 1918, after securing judgment against Kennedy in the attachment suit for the sum of $26,017.89, the judgment creditor assigned his rights to the plaintiff, who brought this action against the city to enforce his claim against the fund garnisheed. The court having rendered judgment in favor of the defendant city, the plaintiff appealed.
Appellant thus states his main contention: "This appeal presents for determination, for the first time in this state, the important question, whether a debt due by a municipal corporation in the conduct of a private and proprietary enterprise — here a municipal water system — may be garnished in an action against the creditor. The appeal is from the judgment entered for defendant, upon sustaining its general demurrer to the complaint." [1] The appellant apparently concedes that such a garnishment could not be levied upon a municipal corporation acting in its governmental capacity. He does, however, contend that in many states the rule is otherwise. In Skelly v. Westminster School Dist.,
The decision of the court in Ruperich v. Baehr, supra, that section 710 of the Code of Civil Procedure was constitutional as applicable to a recognized class is based in part upon the following reasoning: "The fact that there has been heretofore no means by which moneys due from the state, or from its public corporations, could be reached and applied upon the debts of the persons to whom they were due, and that considerations of public policy required that public corporations and public officers and employees should not be held subject to the ordinary provisions and processes of law for the garnishment of debts and claims due or owing, sufficiently distinguishes the classes of persons and assets to which this section relates to justify the legislature in making special regulations concerning the persons concerned and the mode of reaching the assets. It does not destroy its character as a general law, nor its uniformity of operation, that its provisions in these particulars differ somewhat from the ordinary processes of attachment and execution." It is conceded by text-book writers that in a majority of the states the courts have held that municipal corporations are not subject to garnishment (Dillon on Municipal Corporations, 5th ed. [1911], sec. 249; Wade on Attachment, sec. 345; Shinn on Attachment and Garnishment, sec. 500).
It is unnecessary to discuss the reasons advanced in cases which hold to the contrary, as this court has adopted the rule most generally accepted and the legislature by enacting sections 710 and 710a of the Code of Civil Procedure has provided a special method for the subjection of debts due from a municipality to the lien of a judgment. *538
It remains for us to consider whether or not the fact that the city was indebted to the creditor by reason of his contract for the building of a portion of the waterworks owned by the city takes the case out of the well-recognized rule. [2] A municipal corporation is just as truly such when engaged in its proprietary capacity as when engaged in its governmental capacity (City of Pasadena v. Railroad Com.,
Judgment affirmed.
Shaw, J., Sloane, J., Lennon, J., Angellotti, C. J., and Lawlor, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
All the Justices concurred, except Angellotti, C. J., who was absent.